| Francis Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | |||||||
| Book | Page | Topic | |||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 3 | "You" are the behavior of a vast assembly of nerve cells and their associated molecules. | |||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 6 | Not all neuroscientists believe that the idea of the soul is a myth -- Sir John Eccles is the most notable exception -- but certainly the majority do. | 3 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 7 | Many educated people, especially in the Western World, share the belief that the soul is a metaphor and that there is no personal life either before conception or after death. They may call themselves atheists, agnostics, humanists, or just lapsed believers, but they all deny the major claims of the traditional religions. | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 10 | Evolution is not a clean design. As Francis Jacob the French molecular biologist has written, "Evolution is a tinkerer." It builds, mainly in a series of smallish steps, on what was there before. | 3 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 11 | The mature brain is the product of both Nature and Nurture. | #REF! | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 11 | The ability to handle complex language fluently appears to be unique to human beings. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 11 | Much of the behavior of the brain is emergent -- i.e. behavior does not exist in its separate parts, such as the individual neurons. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 11 | Scientific meaning of emergent - The whole may not be the simple sum of the separate parts. The whole can be understood from (1) behavior of the parts plus (2) knowledge of how all the parts interact. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 15 | In the behaviorist movement, all behavior had to be explained in terms of the stimulus and the response. | 4 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 15 | Behaviorism was especially strong in the United States, where was started by John B. Watson and others before World War I. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 15 | Behaviorism flourished in the 1930s and 1940s when B. F. Skinner was its most celebrated exponent. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 15 | Neurobiologists David Hubel and Torsten Wiesel in the late 1950s found that nerve cells in the visual cortex of the brain of an anesthetized cat showed a whole series of interesting responses when light was shown on the cat's opened eyes, even though it's brain waves showed it to be more asleep them awake. For this and subsequent work they were awarded a Nobel Prize in 1981. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 20 | It is better to avoid a precise definition of consciousness. Until the problem is understood much better, a formal definition is likely to be misleading or overly restrictive. | 5 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 21 | A language system of the type found in humans is not essential for consciousness. | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 21 | Not profitable to argue about whether lower animals (octopus) are conscious. It is probable that consciousness correlates to some extent with complexity of any nervous system. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 22 | Attention involves some form of short term memory. Global unity of shape, color, movement, location, etc, may be expressed by the correlated firing of the neurons involved. Neurons that respond to the properties of a particular object fire in synchrony. Other active neurons do not fire in synchrony. | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 30 | Necker cube. | 8 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 36 | Gestalt psychology -- started in Germany at around 1912. When the Nazis came to power all three left Germany for India and the United States. | 6 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 37 | Gestalt laws of grouping include proximity, similarity, continuation, and closure. | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 37 | Gestalt law of proximity states that we tend to group things together that are close to one another, and more distant from other (similar) objects. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 39 | Gestalt law of similarity means that we group things together if they have some obvious visual property in common, such as color or direction of movement. | 2 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 41 | Gestalt laws of perception should not be regarded as rigid laws but as useful heuristics. | 2 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 41 | An important operation in vision, as the Gestaltists recognized, is to separate figure from ground. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 54 | "Everyone likes to show that philosophers are wrong." | 13 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 59 | Psychology distinguishes between "arousal" (or alertness) and "attention." | 5 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 60 | All forms of attention are likely to have both reflex and willed components. | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 60 | Attention filters out unattended events. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 82 | The cortex consists of two separate sheets of nerve cells, one on each side of the head. The sheet varies somewhat in thickness but is typically 2 to 5 millimeters thick. | 22 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 82 | About 100,000 neurons per square millimeter in the cortex. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 83 | The hippocampus stores, probably for a few weeks or so, new long-term episodic memories before the information is established more permanently in the cortex. | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 84 | The thalamus is divided into about two dozen regions, each of which is concerned with some particular subdivision of the neocortex. Each thalamic area also receives massive connections from the cortical areas to which it sends information. These neocortical areas can also connect directly to other parts of the brain. | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 88 | The hypothalamus has many small subregions whose functions are to regulate hunger, thirst, temperature, sexual behavior, and similar body operations. | 4 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 89 | The inactivity of the locus ceruleus during REM sleep may help explain why we are unable to recall the majority of our dreams. | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 92 | When nothing much is happening, a neuron usually sends spikes down its axon at a background rate between 1 and 5 Hz. | 3 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 92 | When a neuron becomes excited, because it receives many excitatory signals, its firing rate increases to 50-100 Hz or more. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 92 | For short intervals, a neuron's firing rate may reach 500 Hz. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 93 | Neuron firing rates - background rate; average rate; as fast as it can - (illustration) | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 103 | Neurons of the brain stem that project to the cortex use transmitters such as serotonin, norepinephrine, and dopamine. Other neurons in the brain use acetylcholine. | 10 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 111 | In REM sleep, brain waves are similar to awake brain, hence the name paradoxical sleep, since the person is asleep but the brain appears to be awake. | 8 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 115 | Two types of brain scan: (1) those that respond to some aspect of the static structure of the brain and (2) those that detect activity. CAT scan uses X-rays. MRI records the density of protons, especially sensitive to water, static, do not register activity. | 4 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 130 | Six layers of LGN of a macque monkey. - (diagram). Each layer gets input from only one eye. | 15 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 131 | Inhibitory neurons in the reticular nucleus of the thalamus. | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 131 | Reticular nucleus of the thalamus is a thin sheet of cells surrounding much of the thalamus. It's neurons are all inhibitory. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 131 | Neurons of the reticular nucleus of the thalamus receive excitation from most of the axons passing to and from the neocortex. Their output is mapped onto the underlying part of the thalamus immediately beneath them. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 131 | If the thalamus can be described as the gateway to the cortex, the reticular nucleus looks like the guardian of the gateway. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 131 | LGN neurons also get input coming back from the visual cortex. Many more axons coming back from the cortex than going to it. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 131 | Inputs from the brainstem that modulate the behavior of the thalamus and especially its reticular nucleus. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 135 | Major pathways within cortical layer V1 - (illustration) | 4 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 137 | Parts of cortical layer V1 show heavy striations. (hence the name 'striate cortex') - (photo) | 2 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 139 | Albert Einstein, "We should make things as simple as possible, but not simpler." | 2 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 145 | Area V1 develops so that broad features, such as which region corresponds to the fovea, are probably laid down by genes. Finer details are likely to be modifications made during input from the eyes, perhaps by whether the firing of neurons are correlated. | 6 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 149 | Almost as many neurons project backward from V2 as project forward from V1. The forward projection goes heavily into layer 4 of V2, whereas the backward projection to V1 avoids layer 4 altogether. | 4 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 149 | At least twenty distinct visual areas have been identified, plus about seven more that are partly visual. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 156 | Many connections between visual areas; RGC, retinal ganglion cells; LGN of thalamus; V1, V2, . . . ER, entorhinal cortex; HC, hippocampus; each line in the diagram symbolizes millions of axons running in both directions - (diagram) | 7 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 157 | There are many cross-connections between cortical areas at the same level. | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 157 | Connections between areas in the cortex are almost always reciprocal. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 157 | Adjacent areas in the cortex almost always connect to each other. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 158 | The general pattern from LGN to hippocampus is that each area receives several inputs from lower layers. | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 158 | Back pathways -- urgently need more study; may help to synchronize neuronal oscillations. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 159 | Whole system does not look like a one-shot static response mechanism. Likely to operate by many transient, dynamic interactions, conducted at a fairly fast rate. | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 159 | Although there are many different visual regions, each of which analyzes visual input in different and complex ways, we can locate no single region in which the neural activity corresponds exactly to the visual picture of the world we see in front of our eyes. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 159 | We can see how the brain takes the picture apart, but do not yet understand how it puts it together. How does it construct the well-organized and detailed visual awareness of all the objects, and the behavior of these objects, in our visual fields? | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 161 | A remarkable degree of functional specialization in the cortex. | 2 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 161 | Living cortex has the texture of a rather soft jelly. Bits of it can easily be removed by sucking on a pipette. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 171 | "Blindsight" -- even with a badly damaged V1, the brain can detect some fairly simple visual stimuli and act on them, although the patient will firmly deny his awareness of them. | 10 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 174 | Hippocampus and its closely associated cortical areas are not necessary for visual awareness. | 3 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 178 | Typical firing rate of active neurons is in the range of 100 spikes/sec. | 4 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 179 | Functionality of the individual neurons are subject to much variability. Neurons are subjected to signals that can modulate their behavior, and some neuron properties can change while the neurons are active. | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 179 | Typical neuron can have anywhere from a few hundred to many tens of thousands of inputs, and its axon projects as multitudeinously. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 179 | A brain does not look even a little bit like a general-purpose computer. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 179 | Different parts of the brain, even different parts of the neocortex, specialize, at least to some extent, in handling different sorts of information. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 179 | Most memory appears to be stored in the very same locations that carry out current operations. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 183 | In 1949, Canadian psychologist Donald Hebb published a book called Organization of Behavior. In the process of learning, one of the key factors is a modification of the strength of the neuronal connections -- the synapses. | 4 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 183 | Donald Hebb's rule -- "When an axon of cell A is near enough to excite a cell B, and repeatedly and persistently takes part in firing it, some growth process or metabolic change takes place in one or both cells such that A's efficiency, as one of the cells firing B, is increased." Such a mechanism, or one somewhat resembling it, is called "Hebbian." | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 184 | Memory is "content addressable." Any appreciable part of the input pattern will act as an address. | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 184 | Memory is embedded in the pattern of weights -- the strength of the connections between all the various neurons. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 184 | Any one memory is distributed over many connections. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 184 | Memory is superimposed, because any one connection can be involved in several memories. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 184 | Memory is robust, since altering a few connections will usually not alter its behavior very much. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 185 | Connections of a region of the hippocampus called CA3 do in fact look like a content-addressable network. | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 207 | Consciousness will correspond to a particular type of activity in a transient set of neurons that are a fraction of a much larger set. [dynamic core] | 22 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 208 | Awareness is likely to involve some form of attention -- we should study the mechanism the brain uses to attend to one visual object rather than another. | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 208 | Awareness is likely to involve some form a very short-term memory. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 208 | It seems probable that, at any moment, any particular object In the visual field is represented by the firing of a set of neurons. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 208 | Any object will have different characteristics (form, color, motion, etc.) that are processed in several different visual areas. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 208 | Seeing any one object often involves neurons in many different visual areas. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 208 | How the neurons in different areas temporarily become active as a unit is often described as the "binding problem." | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 208 | An object seen is often also heard, smell, or felt. This binding must also occur across different sensory modalities. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 209 | Brain can sometimes be tricked into making an incorrect binding, as when you hear the voice coming not from the ventriloquist but from his dummy. | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 211 | Attentional mechanism makes use of correlated firing. -- what matters is not just the average rate of firing of a neuron, but the exact moments at which each neuron fires. | 2 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 211 | Correlated firing -- spikes arriving at a neuron at the same moment will produce a larger effect than the same number of spikes arriving at different times. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 211 | Theoretical requirement is that the firing of the neurons in each set should be strongly correlated with each other, while at the same time firing of neurons in different sets should be weakly correlated, or not at all. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 212 | Necker cube -- bistable vision -- visual information coming into the eyes remains the same, but the percept changes. | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 220 | Cortical area MT is that area mainly concerned with movement, but largely indifferent to color. | 8 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 227 | Thalamus ("gateway to the cortex") has many fairly distinct regions, some of which are interested in vision. | 7 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 227 | Superior colliculus is closely involved with the control of eye movements, another form of visual attention. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 228 | "anesthetize a patient during an operation in such a way that he is unaware of what is going on, partly to spare the patient pain and partly to prevent him from suing them." | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 228 | "unwise to embark on experiments on consciousness on alert people until he had obtained the security of academic tenure." | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 229 | In the somatosensory system, a weak or brief signal can influence behavior without producing awareness, while a stronger or longer signal of the same type can make awareness occur. | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 234 | Awareness may involve reentrant pathways as Gerald Edelman has suggested. | 5 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 234 | Hippocampus is reentrant, since it gets most of its input from the entorhinal cortex and sends most of its output back there. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 234 | Theoretical arguments about reentrant pathways to give it an air of intellectual respectability. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 235 | By the cortical system I mean the cerebral cortex and such regions as the thalamus and claustrum that are very closely associated with it. | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 236 | Although the dendrites and axon of a neuron often extend over several layers, the layer in which its soma (the cell body) is located is probably determined genetically during normal embryonic development. | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 236 | Hippocampal system involved in the temporary storage, or coding, of episodic memory. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 239 | Long-term changes in synaptic strength. | 3 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 240 | Temporary maintenance of reverberating circuits. | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 240 | Reverberation -- associated with active short-term memory. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 240 | Circuit from the thalamus to the type of pyramidal neuron in cortical layer 6, which sends signals back to the same part of the thalamus. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 240 | Back pathway, from layer 6 to the LGN has perhaps five or ten times as many axons as the major forward connections from LGN to layer 4. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 240 | Neural pathways from the brainstem can alter the activity of the LGN during slow wave sleep. | 0 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 241 | It is mainly the lower cortical layers whose activity correlates with consciousness in general, and with visual awareness in particular. | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 242 | One example where short-term memory involves the continued firing of neurons. Working memory for visual spatial location. | 1 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 250 | Claustrum - thin sheet of neurons next to lower cortical layers, project very widely over the cortex. | 8 | ||||
| Crick; Astonishing Hypothesis | 258 | Philosophers have had such a poor record over the last two thousand years that they would do better to show a certain modesty rather than the lofty superiority that they usually display. | 8 | ||||